Diff for "EyeTracking" - Meg Wiki
location: Diff for "EyeTracking"
Differences between revisions 1 and 52 (spanning 51 versions)
Revision 1 as of 2009-04-23 12:34:09
Size: 16
Comment:
Revision 52 as of 2018-01-31 18:11:06
Size: 3279
Editor: JohanCarlin
Comment: Remove link to obsolete wiki entry
Deletions are marked like this. Additions are marked like this.
Line 1: Line 1:
{{attachment:mrclogo.gif}}
Line 2: Line 3:
Eye tracking = Eye tracking =
The CBU currently has 4 eye trackers. One is in the MEG lab, one in the MRI scanner, and two separate eye trackers are in the eye tracking lab in room 443. All eye trackers are manufactured by [[http://www.smivision.com/|SMI]] and use the same SMI software for controlling the eye tracking hardware, for stimulus presentation and for analysis of the eye tracking data. In addition, all trackers can also be used with E-Prime and other custom experiment presentation software.

Since spring 2013 we now have two additional eye trackers in the CALM lab: one Tobii remote tracker and one head mounted eye tracker.

== Eye tracking fundamentals ==
[[EyeTrackingFundamentals|Fundamental information about eye tracking technology]]

[[http://www.eyemovementresearch.com|eyemovementresearch.com]] - A very good online resource for anything related to eye tracking

== CBU Eye Tracking Lab ==
The CBU Eye Tracking Lab is located in room 443 in the west wing. It contains the SMI RED tracker and the SMI High Speed tracker. The two trackers are controlled from a single, shared eye tracking computer, so cannot be used at the same time. The High Speed tracker is mounted on a height adjustable table for optimal comfort and ease of use.

==== Eye trackers at the CBU ====
[[MegEyeTracker|MEG eye tracker]] - 250 hz tracker.

[[MRIEyeTracker|MRI eye tracker]] - 50 hz tracker, similar to MEG setup.

[[REDEyeTracker|RED eye tracker]] - Remote system for behavioural tests.

[[HiSpeedEyeTracker|Hi-speed eye tracker]] - High-speed tracking for more demanding behavioural tests.

== Using eye trackers ==
Eye tracking is not as easy as it might look, and there's also quite a bit of variability between subjects. Most problems can be solved and with the vast majority of people you should be able to acquire decent quality eye tracking data.

[[SettingUpEyeTracker|Eye tracker setup]]

[[EyeTrackingProblems|Common eye tracking problems]]

==== Instructions for specific software packages ====
The SMI eye trackers come with their own stimulus presentation software, Experiment Center, and their own analyses tool, BeGaze. Experiments designed and executed in Experiment Center are very easy to analyse in BeGaze, as everything is recognised automatically. The trade-off is that Experiment Center only allows fairly simplistic experimental designs.

If you want to use other experiment software, you will need to customise your scripts.

[[EyeTrackingWithExperimentCenter|Eye tracking with Experiment Center]]

[[EyeTrackingWithEprime|Eye tracking with Eprime]]

[[EyeTrackingWithMatlab|Eye tracking with Matlab (Cogent / Psychtoolbox)]]

== Data Analysis ==
The eye tracking data can be analysed very easily with the SMI software package BeGaze. This will plot raw data, gaze paths, dwell times, heatmaps etc. at the click of a mouse. It cannot do statistical analyses, though, and you will have to export the data from BeGaze for that. BeGaze will allow you to create areas of interest, even moving ones in videos, and calculate total dwell time for all your AOI's.

[[BeGaze|Analysing Eye tracking data with BeGaze]]

[[ExportingEyetrackingData|Exporting eye tracking data for custom analysis]]

mrclogo.gif

Eye tracking

The CBU currently has 4 eye trackers. One is in the MEG lab, one in the MRI scanner, and two separate eye trackers are in the eye tracking lab in room 443. All eye trackers are manufactured by SMI and use the same SMI software for controlling the eye tracking hardware, for stimulus presentation and for analysis of the eye tracking data. In addition, all trackers can also be used with E-Prime and other custom experiment presentation software.

Since spring 2013 we now have two additional eye trackers in the CALM lab: one Tobii remote tracker and one head mounted eye tracker.

Eye tracking fundamentals

Fundamental information about eye tracking technology

eyemovementresearch.com - A very good online resource for anything related to eye tracking

CBU Eye Tracking Lab

The CBU Eye Tracking Lab is located in room 443 in the west wing. It contains the SMI RED tracker and the SMI High Speed tracker. The two trackers are controlled from a single, shared eye tracking computer, so cannot be used at the same time. The High Speed tracker is mounted on a height adjustable table for optimal comfort and ease of use.

Eye trackers at the CBU

MEG eye tracker - 250 hz tracker.

MRI eye tracker - 50 hz tracker, similar to MEG setup.

RED eye tracker - Remote system for behavioural tests.

Hi-speed eye tracker - High-speed tracking for more demanding behavioural tests.

Using eye trackers

Eye tracking is not as easy as it might look, and there's also quite a bit of variability between subjects. Most problems can be solved and with the vast majority of people you should be able to acquire decent quality eye tracking data.

Eye tracker setup

Common eye tracking problems

Instructions for specific software packages

The SMI eye trackers come with their own stimulus presentation software, Experiment Center, and their own analyses tool, BeGaze. Experiments designed and executed in Experiment Center are very easy to analyse in BeGaze, as everything is recognised automatically. The trade-off is that Experiment Center only allows fairly simplistic experimental designs.

If you want to use other experiment software, you will need to customise your scripts.

Eye tracking with Experiment Center

Eye tracking with Eprime

Eye tracking with Matlab (Cogent / Psychtoolbox)

Data Analysis

The eye tracking data can be analysed very easily with the SMI software package BeGaze. This will plot raw data, gaze paths, dwell times, heatmaps etc. at the click of a mouse. It cannot do statistical analyses, though, and you will have to export the data from BeGaze for that. BeGaze will allow you to create areas of interest, even moving ones in videos, and calculate total dwell time for all your AOI's.

Analysing Eye tracking data with BeGaze

Exporting eye tracking data for custom analysis

CbuMeg: EyeTracking (last edited 2022-02-23 17:42:55 by OlafHauk)